The actions of police officers who showed up on a man’s property to investigate a complaint – which led to the
discovery of marijuana plants – were reasonable, according to the Indiana Court of Appeals.

The Indiana Court of Appeals has ruled in favor of a group of insurance companies that argued a waste management company couldn’t
seek coverage for asbestos and related worker injuries under policies signed by corporate predecessors before 1986.

The Indiana Supreme Court has accepted two cases, one involving a tax revenue assessment dispute and a second asking how trial
judges decide on restraining defendants who disrupt courtroom proceedings.

In an appeal from a man convicted of Class B dealing in methamphetamine and Class B misdemeanor visiting a common nuisance,
the Indiana Court of Appeals has held that photos of a methamphetamine lab were admissible because the physical evidence had
been destroyed.

Attorneys and judges now have more scholarly guidance on wills and other donation-related issues in civil law, after a national
organization released its third and final volume of the Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers.

A woman who challenged the Housing Authority of South Bend’s decision to terminate her lease for federally subsidized
public housing because of criminal activity lost her appeal before the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.